RT
PORTFOLIO M.ARCH O P TI O N I I I
professional experience Hammer & Hand - Design Build Firm - Portland OR Architectural Internship
Architectural Resources Group - Architecture & Historic Preservation - Portland OR Architectural Internship
Studio Progetti - Architecture Firm - Santa Barbara CA Architectural Internship
education University of Oregon - Masters in Architecture 2013 Westmont College - B.A. Economics & Business 2007 Syracuse University - Study Abroad in Florence Italy - Summer 2006
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contents Multnomah Resource Library - Multnomah Village, OR Becca Cavell & Andrew Schilling of THA Architects
Resilient Mixed-Use: East London Howard Davis
World Craft Council: Sri Lanka Susan Jones FAIA of Atelier Jones
Reinvent South Willamette Street: Eugene, OR Anne Delaney - Spring 2011 PART [2] Weeks 5-9
The Architecture and Legacy of Pietro Belluschi Oregon Historical Society Exhibit - Spring 2012
Santa Barbara Community Boathouse Gerry Gast - Thesis Studio - Spring 2013
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Multnomah Resource Library - Multnomah Village, OR Becca Cavell & Andrew Schilling of THA Architects - Fall 2012 This studio explored the role of the Library in contemporary society as technology begins to replace the printed word. Traditionally libraries have been community centers as well as custodians of knowledge. Today libraries are reinventing themselves as Learning Commons and fnding new ways to serve their communities.
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SITE PLAN
This project created a new model for the neighborhood branch library with an emphasis on digital technology. Located on the “main street” of Portland’s established commercial neighborhood: Multnoman Village. This studios main focus was on context, placemaking and enclosure.
CONCEPT PROGRESSION_STAGGERED COUPLET
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CONCEPT MODEL
PRECEDENT INFLUENCES
CORNER PERSPECTIVE STUDIES
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Section 5 1 Section A 1/8" = 1'-0"
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Section B
Section 7 1/8" = 1'-0"
Section C 1
Section 8 1/8" = 1'-0"
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initial elevation study
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Capitol Hwy Elevation
SW TROY ST. ELEVATION
initial elevation study
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ENTRY PERSPECTIVE
TECTONIC SECTION
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OPENING TO TROY ST.
OPENING TO CAPITOL HWY
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foyer / reading room
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resilient mixed-use: [east] London Howard Davis - Fall 2011 White Chapel Road in East London is located in the borough of Tower Hamlets, a neighborhood that many generations of Bangladesh immigrants call home. This ‘Arrival’ part of the city is in desperate need of resilient architecture that can support the economic development of aspiring immigrant communities. The ultimate goal is to build a development that will keep young successful immigrants in the neighborhood that they grew up in. Thus, the development needs to be adaptable to the growth and change that will occur throughout the different stages of their personal and professional lives. I sought to create a place the can foster community living while still integrating different types of work/production environments. In my design I worked to create a space that had a sense of privacy for its residents while also using open space for communal interaction. For example, there are communal gardens which are shared between family housing units and detached live/work units. This ‘infill’ site had many restraints, but it caused each space to be thoroughly tested and developed which created a language and set of relationships between the different building uses.
Program Live/Work............... 8 units / 11,300 sf Residential.............. 20 units / 17,500 sf Apts.....................8 units / 10,800 sf Studios................ 12 units / 6,700 sf Small Production..... 6 units / 4,700 sf Retail Space............ 3,000 sf Shared Production.. 7,500 sf Public Forum........... 2,200 sf Restaurant.............. 3,000 sf Net Indoor Space 66,700 sf
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N SITE PLAN
WHITE CHAPEL ROAD ELEVATION
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GROUND FLOOR
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WHITE CHAPEL ROAD ELEVATION
LIVE / WORK UNIT
INTERIOR ELEVATION
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FINAL MODEL
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WHITE CHAPEL ROAD PERSPECTIVE
UPPER COMMUNITY GARDEN 23
World Craft Council: Sri Lanka Susan Jones - Spring 2012
Design investigation into the material culture of an almost pristine and ancient island, caught up in the upheavals of the transition of ending a 30 year civil war, post-colonial strife, the 2006 Boxing Day tsunami, high energy costs, and current infusion of global capital, requiring a dire need for leadership in sustainable development, considered from a physical, social and material perspective.
Bamboo Fabrication:
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High angles of incidence
passive vs active spaces
solar chimney / light shelfs
workshop rendering
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site model 26
PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK STUDENT PRODUCT
PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK STUDENT PRODUCT
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Owner Project Name Site Plan Level 2 Final 1/16" = 1'-0"
Project Number Date Drawn By Checked By
Scale
ground FLOOR
SECOND FLOOR
Project Number Issue Date Author Checker
A103
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Level 3 Final 1/16" = 1'-0"
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Level 3 F 1/16" =
6/1/2012 12:03:59 AM
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THIRD FLOOR
PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK STUDENT PRODUCT
Level 2 Final 1/16" = 1'-0"
T PRODUCT
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MATERIAL Wood:
Tree Type Jak Eucalyptus
Age 20 19
Yield (m3/ha) 114.8 61.5
Quantity (m3) 305.72 305.72
ha Required 1.04 4.97
Acres Required 2.56 12.28
3
m
Comparing Forrest HARVESTING between LOCAL medium growth JAK and EUCALYPTUS yields
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WATER
AREA NEEDED FOR COLLECTION: 3,574 SF
# of Occupants 45
Contact Surface: ft
Transient 30
Gray Water Need (daily/annually) 226.93 gal / 56,371 gal
Fresh Water Needs (daily/annually) 534.71 gal / 133,677 gal
% Fresh Water Needed to Capture 66%
Storage Tanks:
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Rainfall:
ft/yr 3
ft /yr gal/yr
12,000 8,000 4,000 0
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Filtration Pond:
Sizing WATER storage tanks based on ROOF CONTACT AREA / monthly RAINFALL and buiding use NEEDS
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LIGHT STUDY MODELS
FRONT ELEVATION 30
LIGHT STUDY RENDERINGS
partial WORKSHOP ELEVATION 31
The Architecture and Legacy of Pietro Belluschi Model for the Oregon Historical Society Exhibit - Spring 2012 The department of Architecture at the University of Oregon was approached by Anthony Belluschi to build 8 models of his fathers best work in Portland. My partner Greg Swift and I constructed the Commonwealth Building. It was a two semester project that ultimately got exhibited at the Oregon Historical Society for three months.
site photos sw 6th ave
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The Equitable Building, now known as the Commonwealth Building is a 14-story commercial mid rise tower located on SW 6th Ave and Washington. This building was finished in 1948, and gave Pietro a national reputation for the technologies this building incorporated into its systems.
1/8� scaled model
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Santa Barbara Community Boathouse
Gerry Gast - Thesis Studio - Winter 2013 This projects intent is to explore the revitalization of Mission Creek Lagoon and the integration of a community boathouse. This site has a rich history going back to early 1900’s and this project will help protect the ecology of the lagoon as well as celebrate its importance. The City of Santa Barbara is the primary client for this development and will be a joint use facility on public land. The city will lease the boathouse to the Santa Barbara Rowing Foundation, an existing organization that helps support the growth of rowing in Santa
Barbara. They will be a great tenant that helps promote the sport through reaching out to schools, universities and other rowing programs. This public facility will be home to many different users but the rowing foundation will be the permanent tenant and resource for the community. This project coincides with the city’s goals of redeveloping ocean front parcels, as well as revitalizing Mission Creek Lagoon. This project will be a precedent for new development along Cabrillo Blvd, as well as be Santa Barbara’s first Community Boathouse.
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aerial photo
site photo
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1853 ESTUARY
existing site plan (Parking lot)
Building as Knuckle
SITE PLAN PROPOSAL
Addressing Restored Lagoon
framing the islands
0’
40’
80’
160’
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DESIGN CONCEPTS _ sense of enclosure
Concept Exploration 1 _ Sense of movement between spaces, compression and release, capturing ocean breeze
Concept Exploration 2 _ Limiting views, forcing directionality, light and shadow, rhythm of open/closed, pause/start
Concept Exploration 3 _ Outdoor rooms as connection between buildings, articulating outdoor space, filtered light, variation of building form
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“In Santa Barbara, houses, shops, and even movie theaters and the courthouses sustain a common imagery – they seem convincingly of one place even though they are separated in location. This coherence is not maintained just by “style,” by white walls, tile roofs, and black wrought-iron grilles. It is fundamentally created by a characteristic relationship between people and enclosure.” “At almost every point in the town one is conscious of being enclosed – of being next to walls or within spaces with touchable limits. In the splendid climate these walls don’t need to be roofed. Often they form outdoor rooms as clearly defined as any inside. The walls of Santa Barbara are an accompaniment to one’s movement, a recurring beat that measures passage from place to place. The spaces between are given life by sunlight and darkness, bright windows, shaded arcades, shimmering tiles, the shadows of iron grilles, and exuberant leaves. These walls, open stairways, balconies, and arcades throughout the town serve to symbolize, as much as actually to invite the movement of people between indoors and out. They are an affirmation that the public realm is as much to be lived in as the private. By encouraging and dramatizing the act of public habitation, the builders of Santa Barbara have made a stage for daily action and encounter as rich as any devised by Hollywood.” Charles Moore, The Place of Houses project objectives
SPACES IN SEQUENCE: 1
EXHIBIT PAVILION:
1600 sq ft
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EVENT SPACE:
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CATERING KITCHEN / CAFE:
8 1400 sq ft
Duel functioning space. During the day functions as a small scale restaurant with outdoor seating. Fully equipped catering kitchen to server event space and quarterly regattas.
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REST ROOMS:
5
LOCKER ROOMS:
SHOWER FACILITY:
800 sq ft
OFFICE SPACE:
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CLASSROOM:
12
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BOATHOUSE:
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1000 sq ft
Public rest rooms directly off main circulation. Separate male & female facilities.
1300 sq ft
Allotted to rowing facilities as well as for public kayak rentals. Pad lock storage.
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BOATBUILDING: Supports building of wooden kayaks and outrigger canoes. Tools include: table saw, planner, joiner. Wood storage, work tables and display tables. Space opens to outdoor room to engage public interest and involvment.
3200 sq ft
PUBLIC DOCK:
1600 sq ft
RENTAL FACILITY:
400 sq ft
Semi permanent storage racks for kayak rentals. Space set aside for boat rinsing. Water hookups installed on East side of pier.
900 sq ft
Conference table and small kitchen for rowers and faculty. Adjacent to boatbuilding facility.
3200 sq ft
Floating dock to interact with 6ft tide swings. PrImary use is for launching rowers, but can be used for public swimming during summer.
400 sq ft
Classroom supports the boat building classes and lectures. Users are from rowing foundation.
BOAT STORAGE: Storing rowing shells, eight man to single skulls. stacks are displayed to public and engage open space for washing and accessing dock.
300 sq ft
Two full time faculty for boathouse. Direct connection to classroom and boathouse communtiy room.
1800 sq ft
Facility able to accommodate groups of up to 150 ppl. Space available for dinning or conference. Adjacent to outdoor room as well as exhibit pavilion. Space is interconnected with catering kitchen.
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Five shower stalls with one restroom. Adjacent to locker rooms.
Educational facility for history and interaction with lagoon restoration. Permanent displays as well as flexible space for art installations.
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VIEWING PLATFORM:
2400 sq ft
Pier terminates with viewing platform. Main stage for regattas and tournaments. Space flexible for fishing, ceremonies and vendors.
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south-west elevation
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floor plan
0’
1. EXHIBIT PAVILION 2. EVENT SPACE 3. CATERING KITCHEN / CAFE 4. RESTROOMS 5. LOCKERS / SHOWERS 6. BOATHOUSE FACILITY 7. BOAT BUILDING WORKSHOP 8. BOAT STORAGE 9. KAYAK RENTAL DOCK 10. PUBLIC DOCK 11. VIEWING PLATFORM
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20’
40’
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80’
80’
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SITE SECTION
PUBLIC BOARDWALK 42
0’
20’
40’
80’
EXHIBIT PAVILION 43
STEEL MOMENT FRAME STEEL TRELLIS CABLE RETRACTABLE CANVAS AWNING
ROPE PULLEY SYSTEM
FLOATING BOAT RAMP
(+) 2FT HIGH TIDE
(-) 4FT LOW TIDE
FLOATING DOCK
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0’
4’
8’
16’
passive strategies
boat building workshop 6.
1. 2.
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sun altitude
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14'-0"
40'-0"
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cross ventilation _ capture summer breeze 1. ROOF ASSEMBLY: - metal seam roof - rigid insulation - composite metal decking 2. STEEL T BEAM 3. HOPPER WINDOW 4. SLUMP GLASS FIN 5. PRECAST CONCRETE COLUMN 6. 7. 8. 9.
INTERNAL GUTTER DUST COLLECTION BOAT BUILDING WORKSHOP CONCRETE TOPPING W/ FINE WASHED SURFACE 10. PRECAST DOUBLE TEE 11. INVERTED T PRECAST GIRDER 12. PRECAST COLUMN
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4’
8’
16’
vertical shades _ slump glass fins
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3.
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1. boathouse facility 2. boatbuilding display 3. bi-fold hangar door w/ mechanical lift 4. ambient air cleaner 5. wood joiner 6. wood planer 7. chop saw 8. external dust collector 9. internal connection to boat storage
BOAT BUILDING SECTION 46
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BOAT BUILDING WORKSHOP 48
BOAT STORAGE 49
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FLOATING boat dock
bay study tectonic model
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t hank
YOU
R YA N E M I L T Y N I (805) 801-0259 ryantyni@gmail.com